Arts & Entertainment 4-5-17

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April 5, 2017

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Independent/Dawn Watson, Courtesy LongHouse Reserve

On Saturday LongHouse Reserve in East Hampton hosted a Pierson Fashion Workshop Exhibition and Fashion Show. Funded by the Donald Reutershan Educational Trust and LongHouse Reserve, Pierson students used the 16-acre reserve and sculpture garden as inspiration for their designs, which were unveiled on the blue runway during their formal fashion show. (L to R) Evelyn Carrillo, Tilly Frisbie, Gabriella Knab, Ella Parker, Simone Kessler, Alex Kamper, Catheliya Reed, Ella Parker, Maylee Konak, Ava O’Shea, and Gianna Ekstra.

Independent/Richard Lewin

reCepTioniST WanTed

Last Wednesday evening international interior designer Marshall Watson celebrated his first book launch in New York City with colleagues, friends, family, and members of the interior design and architectural communities. In The Art of Elegance, published by Rizzoli, Marshall shares his finest work including some from the East End, and explains how he translated each family’s lifestyle and aspirations, the house’s history, and the surrounding environment into a highly original form of elegance.

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WHAT’S

BLACK & WHITE & FUN

ALL OVER?

A Moveable Feast

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431 East Main St, Riverhead 631.208.9200, ext. 426 Open year-round from 10am - 5pm LongIslandAquarium.com Independent/Nicole Teitler

The Joshua Levine Memorial Foundation and Slow Food East End hosted “A Moveable Feast,” an evening of celebration honoring Joshua Levine and supporting Edible School Gardens on the East End on Sunday at Dodds & Eder Landscape Design Showroom in Sag Harbor.

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Closed Christmas & Thanksgiving. *Admission must be used within 7 days of your birthday. No exceptions and no refunds for previously purchased tickets. Valid ID is required. No ID no admittance. Birthday offer cannot be combined with any other offer. Good for 2017.


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Judy Berlin 25 Years: 25 Films By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Bay Street Theater and The Hamptons International Film Festival will continue its “25 Years: 25 Films” series with a screening of Judy Berlin on Sunday at 6 PM, featuring a special appearance by lead actress Edie Falco. Falco is a renowned television, film, and stage actress best known for her work in HBO series “The Sopranos” and “Oz,” and the Showtime hit “Nurse Jackie.” Following the screening Falco will be speaking about the film. With a ticket to the HIFF screening, guests can also attend her talkback.

HIFF’s “25 Years: 25 Films” series celebrates the festival’s silver anniversary with screenings of 25 years of film. Throughout 2017 films will be screened at cultural organizations in The Hamptons as well as New York City, Palm Beach, and LA. Catch films on the East End at venues that include Bay Street, Southampton Arts Center, Parrish Art Museum, Guild Hall, East Hampton Library, Gurney’s Montauk, Mandala Yoga, and The Surf Lodge. Judy Berlin is a 1999 American drama film directed by Eric Mendelsohn. A schoolteacher, Sue

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Berlin develops a romantic attachment to the principal, Arthur Gold, who is in an unhappy marriage with his wife Alice. Their grown children, aspiring actress Judy and wanna-be filmmaker David, meet and form an attraction of their own. Mendelsohn won the directing prize for Judy Berlin at the 1999 Sundance International Film Festival. Also coming up this month in the “25 Years: 25 Films” series is a screening of Embrace Of The Serpent on Friday, April 14, at the Parrish Art Museum; a screening of Kinsey on Thursday, April 20, at Bay Street; and a screening of No Man’s Land on Thursday, April 27, at Bay

Street. For a full schedule visit www. hamptonsfilmfest.org. Ticket prices for Friday night’s screening of Judy Berlin are $10 and are available online at www.baystreet. org and hamptonsfilmfest.org, or by calling the Bay Street Theater Box Office at 631-725-9500.

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Independent/ Jon Schusteritsch www.jschusteritsch.com

Pink Pearl Gala: Awarding Excellence

Photos from last year’s gala.

By Nicole Teitler

Ann Cotten-DeGrasse and her late husband, Antonio DeGrasse, who passed away in early 2016, will be awarded the Pink Pearl Community Service Award this Friday at the Third Annual Pink Pearl Gala. A benefit for the North Fork Breast Health Coalition, the dinner and awards ceremony will be held from 6 to 10 PM at East Wind in Wading River. T h e a l l - v o l u n t e e r, n o n p r o f i t organization supporting local breast cancer patients was founded by the DeGrasses in 1998 after they saw the lack of breast cancer support services on the North Fork. After Ann’s discovery of two benign lumps, and undergoing a biopsy, the experience prompted her husband to attend a conference held by the South Fork Breast Health Coalition. Antonio met Susan Roden, founder of the group, and was encouraged to start something similar on the North Fork. As a Rotarian in Riverhead, Antonio went to the Rotary seeking legal advice about start the new venture. Once he received $5000 to get things moving, Antonio picked Rotarians based on their varied skills to run things with him.

“My husband was the shaker and maker behind this coalition . . . those people were the nucleus that started this,” Ann Cotten-DeGrasse explained. Within a few years she took the role as president of the organization, a position she held for 12 years. “He was the impetus for starting this.” NFBHC offers reflexology, yoga, massage therapy, and support groups, in addition to the $1000 Lend a Helping Hand Grant. “I always think of him saying, ‘It’s for the women’ . . . He would always come back to that and make us feel like we have to do more, to continue this,” Cotten-DeGrasse remembered. This year, the foundation will also honor Flora Garsten and her late husband, Irwin, with the Pink Pearl Spirit Award. “Isn’t it ironic that the two widows now are the ones who are going to be accepting for the men that were really the instrumental people that moved this forward?” This year’s benefit emcee will be News 12 Long Island Reporter Shari Einhorn. Seating is available for $125 per person. To reserve individual seating, reserve tables for a group, or to inquire about corporate sponsorship

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Gallery Walk

By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Artwork by Frank Sofo in The Wednesday Group’s “Welcome Spring” exhibit.

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

Welcome Spring

The Wednesday Group, Plein Air Painters of the East End is holding its first show of the season, “Welcome Spring,” on Saturday and Sunday at Ashawagh Hall in Springs. A reception will be held on Saturday from 5 to 7 PM. Artist include Anna Franklin, Jean Mahoney, Deb Palmer, Alyce Peifer, Gene Samuelson, Christine Chew Smith, Cynthia Sobel, Frank Sofo, Bob Sullivan, Aurillo Torres, and Dan Weidmann.

Bent

White Room Gallery in Bridgehampton presents “Bent” with artwork by Charles Waller, David Geiser, and Mark S. Fisher. Geiser is an illustrator and a creator of several underground comix and has worked with comix creators such as S.

Clay Wilson. He is also an abstract expressionist painter known for his tactile works with layers of tar, shellac, and scrap wood. This series at the gallery will include his demented clown paintings which are vibrant in color, playful, yet also twisted in nature. Waller has won numerous awards for his illustrations in such publications as the New York Times, Esquire, and Sports Illlustrated. He wrote for the NY Times for over 15 years. His work is satirical and has the gift of turning found objects into amazing pieces of art. This show will exhibit his “Gay Pirate” series. Fisher is a Boston area based artist who has been creating artwork over the span of five decades. He was also a long time illustrator for the Boston Globe. His work encompasses illustration, graphic design, comics, found object assemblage, science fiction artifacts, and fantastic interiors for businesses and restaurants. The works in the show are images

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Artwork by Charles Waller at the White Room Gallery.

taken from his sketchbooks which he digitally scans for adding color and enhancement. His sketchbook drawings are the most direct and raw link to his imagination bereft of overdesign and conceptualization. An opening reception will be held Saturday from 6 to 8 PM and there will be live music by The Benders. The show will run through April 23.

The Artist Members Exhibition is the oldest non-juried museum exhibition on Long Island. Artists from every level participate in this exhibition to show their support of Guild Hall and its role in their life as their community. An opening reception will be held on Saturday from 4 to 6 PM. The show will run through June 3. For more info visit www.guildhall.org.

Member Exhibition

Roxanne Panero

Guild Hall in East Hampton presents its 79th Annual Guild Hall Artist Member Exhibition. Over 400 artists participate for the opportunity to be awarded Top Honors and receive a solo show in the Museum’s Spiga Gallery. The 2017 Awards Judge is Ruba Katrib, Curator, SculptureCenter.

The Art Gallery at the Quogue Library presents Sagaponack-based artist Roxanne Panero with “Scenes from Nature” for its April exhibit. A reception will be held on Sunday from 3 to 4:30 PM. More of the artist’s work can be seen at www.rpanero.com. The show will run through April 30.

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Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

By Camila Tucci

Music Suffolk Theater

The 50th Anniversary of Vanilla Fudge is set for Friday at 8 PM at the Suffolk Theater in Riverhead. As one of the first bands to combine hard rock and psychedelia, Vanilla Fudge inspired many through their original sound. I Am King: The Ultimate Michael Jackson Tribute with Michael Firestone comes to Suffolk Theater from Las Vegas on Saturday at 8 PM. Michael Firestone will perform Jackson’s biggest hits. For more info or to purchase tickets visit suffolktheater.com.

Country

The East Hampton Library hosts Gayden Wren as Tennessee Walt in “Bristol and Beyond: The Birth of Country Music” on Saturday from 1 to 3 PM. Tennessee Walt will perform some classic country hits and also speak about the Sessions and their legacy as a tribute to the 90th anniversary of Bristol Sessions. To register call 631324-0222, ext. 3.

Benefit Concert

The Songwriter Share Concert Series continues with a concert by Fred Raimondo with special guests Sarah Green, Jean Schroeder, and Paul Brokaw on Friday at 8 PM at the Unitarian Universalist Meetinghouse in Sag Harbor. The concert will benefit the Retreat, a shelter that provides safety for victims of domestic abuse. Admission is $15.

Wednesday Night Live

Ray Red and Mike Rusinsky host “Wednesday Night Live,” a weekly open mic at MJ Dowling’s in Sag Harbor from 8 to 11 PM. Performers include musicians, poets, comedians, and singers. Sign up starts at 7 PM. Performers get a free soft drink or tap beverage. Every Friday, it’s karaoke beginning at 10 PM.

Stephen Talkhouse

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Amagansett presents Outrageous Open Mic Night on Thursday at 8 PM. On Friday night at 8 PM The Truants perform. To follow at 10 PM it’s The Who Dat. The Crushing Violets are set for 8 PM on Saturday. Revel In Dimes take the stage at 10 PM. Visit stephentalkhouse.com or call 631-2673117 to purchase tickets early or for more info.

Townline BBQ

Townline BBQ in Sagaponack continues Karaoke Nights ever y Saturday from 8 PM to 12 AM with a special food and drink menu as guests sing their favorites. Come for free pool and pub quiz night at 7 PM every Thursday evening and come hear some “smokin’ hot tunes” live alongside a happy hour menu every Friday from 5 to 8 PM. This week John Divello performs. For more info call 631-537-2271 or visit the Townline BBQ Facebook page.

Words Book Club

BookHampton in East Hampton hosts Story Time for children on Sunday at 10:30 AM. Visit bookhampton.com for more info.

Writer Speak Wednesday

Stony Brook Southampton MFA, with support from Harbor Books in Sag Harbor, has arranged a calendar of author readings and discussions. On Wednesday, April 19, Julie Shigekuni will speak. She is a former New York Times reporter and author of The Story: A Reporter’s Journey. She will speak at the Radio Lounge on the second floor of Chancellors Hall in Southampton. The reception begins at 6:30 PM and the readings and discussions will start at 7 PM. Visit stonybrook.edu/mfa or call 631-632-5028 to register or for any questions.

Theater The Wave

A live theatrical production of The Wave is set for Wednesday and Thursday at 7 PM and Friday and Saturday at 8 PM at Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor. The Wave tells the story of “a young 1960’s

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John Divello Band

California history teacher who wanted to deter his students from the allure of totalitarianism.” To purchase tickets visit baystreet.org.

Extinction

Guild Hall in East Hampton and Where Are They Going Theatre Group present Extinction by Gabe McKinley and directed by Josh Gladstone from Thursday through April 16 on Wednesdays through Sundays at 7 PM. Two matinees at 2 PM will take place on Saturday and April 15. The show follows two college buddies as they explore the evolution of friendship and what we sometimes do to try and save them when they are falling into extinction. Tickets are $25, $23 for members, and $15 for students under 18. Tickets are available at guildhall. org.

East Hampton Library

Story Salon, a live storytelling venue based in Los Angeles, is coming to the East End with Story Salon East on Saturdays from 11 AM till noon at East Hampton Library. Each week seven people from the group will each tell a story of up to seven minutes long. Story Salon East is hosted by Steve Sobel,

an East Hampton resident. Coloring, Coffee, and Conversation is set for every Thursday from 1 to 2:30 PM. To register for these events call 631-3240222, ext.3.

Film Judy Berlin

The Hamptons International Film Festival will continue their 25 Years: 25 Films series with a screening of Judy Berlin on Sunday at Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor at 6 PM. Special guest Edie Falco will speak after the film. Tickets are $10. To purchase tickets visit baystreet.org.

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Sweet Charities

By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

Pink Pearl Gala

At the third annual “Pink Pearl Gala” on Friday the North Fork Breast Health Coalition will recognize Ann Cotten-DeGrasse and her late husband, Antonio DeGrasse, with the Pink Pearl Community Service Award. The dinner and award ceremony, followed by dancing to music provided by DJ Phil, will be held from 6 to 10 PM at East Wind in Wading River. The North Fork Breast Health Coalition is an all-volunteer, nonprofit organization that supports local breastcancer patients with programs such as Helping Hand grants. Seating for this year’s gala is available for $125 per person. To reserve individual seating, reserve tables for a group, or to inquire about corporate sponsorship opportunities, call 631-208-8889, contact Melanie McEvoy at melanie@ mcevoyandassociates.com or visit www.northforkbreasthealth.org. Tickets are also available through www. nycharities.org.

Katy’s Courage 5K

Katy’s Courage presents the seventh annual Katy’s Courage 5K on Saturday, April 22. Registration and check-ins will take place from 7 to 8:15 AM and the race will begin promptly at 8:30 AM. Pre-registration costs $25 per person, and day-of costs $30 per person. Runners will start at 21 West Water Street in Sag Harbor. Participants may register online at http://bit. ly/2mjBOJC. Katy’s is a not-for-profit organization honoring Katy Stewart, an inspirational 12-year-old girl who died from a rare form of pediatric liver cancer. The organization is dedicated to education, research, and grief support for children, teens, and their families on the East End.

Spring Fling

The Parrish Art Museum in Water Mill presents its annual “Spring Fling” on Saturday, April 22. The evening of food, music, and fun provides guests the opportunity to meet up with friends and make new connections, dance all night to electrifying live music by NOIZ,

enjoy delicious hors d’oeuvres and an open bar, and bid on unique Hamptons experiences and items. Visit www. parrishart.org for more information.

Taste Of Tuckahoe

The seventh annual “Taste of Tuckahoe” fundraiser, benefiting the Tuckahoe School, will be held on Friday, April 28, from 7 to 10 PM at 230 Elm, with a VIP hour running from 6 to 7 PM. Once again, restaurants and wineries from the East End will come together under one roof to highlight their culinary talents for the community to enjoy. Regular admission ticket cost is $35 in advance, and $45 at the door, and VIP tickets are $60. Tickets can be purchased at Southrifty Drug, from committee members, or via the website at www.TasteofTuckahoe. com. The VIP hour will include open bar and early access to the food and drinks at the event, as well as the Chinese and silent auctions.

Summer Kick-off Party

Hampton Lifeguard Association presents its “Summer Kick-off Party” in support of the Junior Lifeguard and Lifeguard Training Programs on Saturday, April 29, at Westlake Fish House in Montauk. There will be music by Montauk Manny, a cash bar, delicious food, a silent and Chinese auction, and a 50/50 raffle. Tickets are $35 per person or $50 per couple. For tickets contact Stephanie Brabant at 631-329-3990 or smbrabant1@ optonline.net. Ticket will also be available at the door.

BH Half-Marathon

The “Bridgehampton HalfMarathon,” scheduled to take place Saturday, April 29, will once again benefit Southampton Hospital. Since its creation in 2014, the Bridgehampton Half has been the go-to half-marathon to kick off the East End running season. The course brings runners through Bridgehampton and Sagaponack Village, offering scenic views of stunning estates, white sand beaches, potato fields, and horse farms. Online registration for the Bridgehampton Half ends April 15. There is no race day registration. To learn more, or to register, visit www. runthehamptons.com.

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astrology & all Highlights of the week:

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Joanne Wolff

in between can be trying. BREATHE!

Today Saturn, the planet of Karma and Order, stops in the sky to go backwards also. Circumstances around your goals or wishes may come up once more for review. We can feel like we are running in place. On Saturday Mercury stops to go retrograde for the next three weeks. You may hear about old friends or relive some old situation in a new way. With the full moon in Libra on Monday, those old dreams (or people) that returned may have to be changed or released in a new way. Don’t forget to make those wishes on this moon as this is a magical time. Remember that we are in very uncertain times and we may be surprised with events that pop up in our personal lives as well as our communities.

TAURUS (4/21 - 5/20) Watch that spending on any luxury item. Before you hand over your hard-earned cash, make sure you research the purchase as only a Taurus can and you may find a treasure.

ARIES (3/20 - 4/20) Oh, those plans you have envisioned and want to happen now may be placed on hold for a while. Relationships from your mailman to your children and everyone

LEO (7/22 - 8/23) That hobby or secret career dream you have been wanting to do can happen. Make time to seriously plan how to get it going. Friends will back you up.

GEMINI (5/21 - 6/20) Try to spend as much time in nature or out of doors as possible. This will help clear the cobwebs from your brain. You need to reconnect with friends and family. Perhaps tickets to a show or some sports event will make you feel better. CANCER (6/21 - 7/22) This week finds you wanting to bond with close friends and family. Perhaps the stress of work has made you feel drained and unable to spend time relaxing. Have them over for a casual dinner to revive your soul.

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VIRGO (8/23 - 9/22) Going back to school to gain better skills on the job or simply attending a seminar on a subject you like can do wonders for your wellbeing. You may even meet a new friend or two. LIBRA (9/23 - 10/22) A new job opportunity may fall into your lap. Just be sure to ask all the questions and know what you are getting involved with. Also you may be asked to invest in a project and the same advice applies. Just check before signing on the dotted line. SCORPIO (10/23 - 11/21) You must have some heart to heart talks with your partner, whether it is your lover, wife, or boss. Things have to be put back on track before they derail. SAGITTARIUS (11/22 - 12/21) Friends are there for you this week if you feel like the world is caving in. Make time to organize your paperwork or your home and you will feel more in control. CAPRICORN (12/21 - 1/21) Time to put down the phone and let someone else pull their weight at the office. You need to relax, so try to use this time to make something fun happen. You do remember what fun is?

April 5, 2017

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AQUARIUS (1/21 - 2/19) Oh, how we hate to budget, but that is what you must do now. Getting your money in order will give you a clear picture of what you can spend. PISCES (2/19 - 3/20) Plans may have to be placed on the shelf for awhile as communications may be hard to control. Use the time to reconnect with friends and enjoy yourself. JOANNE WOLFF is a Certified Astrologer who does private readings, which help her clients use the power of the planets in their unique birth charts. Joanne is available for Private readings either by phone or in person. She can be reached at 516-996-5354. (Text too!)

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East End Calendar Highlights Compiled By Kitty Merrill

Each week we’ll highlight local community events and library offerings presented by area institutions and organizations. It’s on you to send ‘em in, kids. Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email news@ indyeastend.com.

East Hampton WEDNESDAY 4•5•17 • AARP tax assistance is available at the East Hampton Library every Wednesday until April 12 from 10 AM to 1 PM. Call 631-324-0222 ext.3 to make an appointment. FRIDAY 4•7•17 • Springs Presbyterian Church hosts Friday Night Takeout. This week’s menu is shrimp and rice casserole with salad, biscuit and dessert for $14. Available from 3:30 to 6 PM while supplies last. • East Hampton Town Democrats host an evening devoted to detailing everything you need to know to get involved in government at 6:30 PM at St. Michael’s Church in Amagansett. RSVP to ehdems2017@aol.com. SATURDAY 4•8•17 • From 9 AM till noon the Montauk Community Church hosts a rummage sale. Rain or shine. • All Families invited to join in the fun and meet the Easter Bunny at the annual Ladies Village Improvement Society East Egg Hunt. The free quest goes down at 11 AM at the LVIS digs on Main Street in East Hampton.

BYO baskets. • East Hampton Trails Preservation Society hosts a hike along the Amsterdam Beach trail in Montauk at 10 AM. Meet at a small parking lot on Rte 27 about three miles east of Montauk Village and across from Deep Hollow Ranch Stables. Leader: Eva Moore (631238-5134) or day of hike, 631-681-4774. SUNDAY 4•9•17 • Hop on over to the ARF Adoption Center on Daniels Hole Road in Wainscott from 11 AM to 12:30 PM for crafts, refreshments and an Easter Egg Hunt for kids and their K9 companions! Plus meet the cats and dogs available for adoption. The Easter Egg Hunts starts at 11:30. Find the Golden Egg and win a basket courtesy of Harbor Books in Sag Harbor. Bring your own Easter Basket to collect eggs. More information at www.arfhamptons.org or call 631-537-0400 ext 203. MONDAY 4•10•17 • It’s an “Eggs All Around” storytime and craft at Amagansett Library at 2 PM. Kids aged three to eight can join the folks at the library for a special Vacation Week Storytime about all things egg, followed by an open ended craft project. TUESDAY 4•11•17 • The Jewish Center of the Hamptons presents a very special Second Night Seder at 5 PM. Rabbi Zimmerman and Cantor/Rabbi Stein will conduct a beautiful, moving, and inspiring Pesach Seder in the

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Main Sanctuary. RSVP to the JCOH office by calling 631-324-9858 or by emailing office2@jcoh.org. Note that no one will be denied this experience due to finances; speak with Rabbi Zimmerman or Cantor/Rabbi Stein to make special arrangements in confidence. JCOH is located on Woods Lane in East Hampton Village.

Southampton THURSDAY 4•6•17 • Hampton Bays Library hosts the Finding & Following One’s True Life Purpose Workshop Series this week and next Thursday night from 7 to 8 PM. In this workshop series led by Donald Pra Deaner, Life Purpose Coach and Reiki Practitioner, you will learn how to find and follow your true life’s purpose, know the benefits of doing so, and have a deeper understanding of yourself. • Take singing classes with Valerie diLorenzo every Thursday night through May 11 from 5:30 to 9 PM or Fridays from noon to 2 PM at the Southampton Arts Center on Pond Lane in Southampton Village. Both classes will culminate with a Singers Showcase on Saturday, May 13 at 7 PM. No class on 4/21 or 5/4. Reservations for all programs can be made through southamptonartscenter.org or by calling 631-283-0967. SATURDAY 4•8•17 • Finally, an art class for seniors that really works! This three-week workshop series for seniors only is led by professional artist Harvey Herman. It’s held at Hampton Bays Library from noon to 1:30 PM. • At 5 PM Canio’s Books in Sag Harbor will host a celebration of the poetry of Bill Knott, whose works have just been published posthumously by Farrar, Straus & Giroux. The new volume, I Am Flying Into Myself: Selected Poems 1960-2014, edited by Tom Lux, has been featured in The New Yorker Magazine. Poets Star Black, of Sag Harbor and Bill Zavatsky, of New York will read from Bill Knott’s collection and will share stories about the poet they both knew and admired. • Discover “The Magic of Compost” at Quogue Library. From 11 AM to noon, join Cornell Master Gardener Roxanne Zimmer, Ph.D., as she takes you underground to show you how and why compost improves the quality of soil. Beginners will learn how to make their own compost. Compost veterans will enhance current techniques with better practices. Register by calling the Quogue Library at 631-6534224 ext. 101. • As part of its 120th anniversary celebration, the Westhampton Free Library is hosting a “New Foods” food-tasting event from 1:30 to 2:30 PM. Families will have the opportunity to try foods that were introduced during the early 1900s. For more information, call 631-288-3335 or visit the library website at www. westhamptonlibrary.net. • As day becomes night, male woodcocks spiral up to the clouds striving to win over potential mates with their complex aerial display. Join Group For The East End to observe the entertaining courtship flights of the American Woodcock from 7 to 8:15 PM

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in Bridgehampton. For reservations or more information about meeting place, contact Steve Biasetti at 631-7656450 ext. 205 or sbiasetti@eastendenvironment.org. • At 10:30 AM South Fork Natural History Museum presents a special tour of the Quogue Wildlife Refuge & Nature Center. Expect to make a $5 per person contribution to the Refuge for this tour. Call SoFo at 631-537-9735 for registration, admission, and meet up location information. SUNDAY 4•9•17 • The Friends of the Rogers Memorial Library will present the TransAtlantic Piano Duo with Evelyn Ulex and Pablo Lavandera at 3 PM. The duo will offer a four-hand piano journey from Europe to North and South America featuring music by Rachmaninoff, Debussy, Khachaturian, Gershwin, Piazzolla, and Villa Lobos. A reception will follow. Register at www.myrml.org or call 631-283-0774 ext.523. • Take a free Spring Qigong Class at noon at the Unitarian Universalist Meetinghouse, 977 Bridgehampton-Sag Harbor Turnpike. For more info call Tina at 631-723-1923. • Sunday Services at the Unitarian Universalist Meetinghouse, 977 Bridgehampton-Sag Harbor Turnpike @ Scuttlehole Rd take place at 10:30 AM. This week the topic is, “Is Change Gonna Do Me Good?” • The Horticultural Alliance of the Hamptons hosts “Lawn Alternatives: Creating A Successful Groundcover” with presentation by Larry Weaner at 2 PM. Admission: $10 for non-members of the Horticultural Alliance, free for members. Location: Bridgehampton Community House main hall. MONDAY 4•10•17 • The Rogers Memorial Library and the Southampton Historical Museum will offer a talk on the Lusitania, the Sussex, and America’s road into World War I at 5:30 PM at the library. Michael A. Barnhart, Ph. D., Professor of History at Stony Brook University, will discuss America’s intervention in the First World War. Register at www. myrml.org or call 631-283-0774 ext 523. TUESDAY 4•11•17 • There’s a Full Pink Moon Hike from 8:30 to 9:30 PM co-sponsored by Friends of the Long Pond Greenbelt and South Fork Natural History Museum. Join FLPG and SoFo on a leisurely-paced hike through open-field trails. Refreshments afterward. Meet at the SoFo Museum parking lot, 377 Bridgehampton Turnpike, 200 yards north of the RR tracks. Leader: Jean Dodds, 631-599-2391. WEDNESDAY 4•12•17 • The Westhampton Beach Free Library is offering cooking classes for its younger patrons during the month of April. Today, two pizza panini cooking sessions are scheduled. Elementary school age patrons are invited to learn how to make pizza paninis with chef Rob Scott from 1:30 to 2:30 PM and children ages nine to 12 can try their hand at panini making at 3 PM. For more information and to register, call 631288-3335 or visit the library website at www. westhamptonlibrary.net.

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April 5, 2017

27

Broadway Reporting From

By Isa Goldberg

(& Sometimes Off)

Joan Of Arc: Into The Fire With book, music, and lyrics by David Byrne of the Talking Heads, Joan of Arc: Into The Fire at The Public Theater, is completely sensational. Byrne’s, Here Lies Love, about the life of Imelda Marcos, premiered at The Public a few years ago, also to a euphoric reception. Sensation is Byrne’s coat of arms. His collaborator, Alex Timbers, who directed the musical about Marcos, brings his brand of radical, fantastical, and in-your-face theater, to this contemporary musical about the allusive Saint Joan. Add to this Stephen Hoggett’s bold choreography, and you know you’re Into The Fire. Playing Joan of Arc, Jo Lampert, a performer and lead singer for the band tUnE-yArDs, is astonishing. Capturing the zeitgeist with gender fluidity, Lampert is the stunning creator of her own being. Her on-stage transformation from a feminine young woman to a warrior in a black motorcycle jacket dancing with a sword is an intense kind of psychological surgery. Iggy Pop-thin, tall and lithe, she delivers an arresting physical performance, while snaring us with a voice that ranges from pure and boyish to piercing and ardent. Essentially, the show is a sung through rock musical, ranging in style from blasting electronic feedback to the sweetest of ballads, such as “Send Her to Heaven,” sung by Joan’s mother (Mare Winningham) twenty four years after her daughter was burned at the stake. With the exception of Joan and her mother, all the actors on the stage are men, so the production resonates with a powerful masculinity that is brutish at times. That Joan was canonized more than 500 years after being killed by the country she fought to protect, speaks to the enduring nature of the mythology that surrounds her. That she was fierce, and rejected the gender that inhibited her ferocity, is one reason to reclaim her today. That she was a patriotic freedom fighter who waged war to liberate the villages in her native France, makes her an icon we can look to in this tough political time. (After all, were it not for the many, many Americans who raised their voices to protect us from the repeal of Obamacare, we would have lost it.) That Joan was martyred by both church and state to hide their lies is, yet again, a sad contemporary sort of antidote. This is a stylish production, indeed, with ingenious costumes by Clint Ramos, who has draped the soldiers in cloaks that bear the British flag on one side and the fleur de lys on the

other. Men, fighting themselves, is a powerful image here, as are Darrel Maloney’s projections, which open the show, swinging back in time at high speed, from today to the Middle Ages. It happens so quickly, it’s as if nothing has changed. Sunday In The Park with George Looking haggard and deep in thought, Jake Gyllenhaall makes his Broadway musical debut as George Seurat in this, the second Broadway revival of Stephen Sondheim’s Sunday In The Park with George. Watching this production at a Wednesday matinee, the audience greeted Gyllenhaal with an unprecedented silence - a rare moment of respect for a movie star, while Annaleigh Ashford (Dot), who makes her entrance just moments after his, received thunderous applause. A Broadway legend in her own day, Ashford delivers a subtle performance - as serious as it is humorous. Gyllenhaal, however, is masterful. While he is not a singer on par with the likes of Mandy Patinkin, who created the role on Broadway, Gyllenhaal works with an entirely different stage vocabulary. “Take The Day Off,” is a song George sings about painting The Dog in his 1884 masterpiece, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte. “Rolling around in mud and dirt/Begging a bone on Sunday,” are literally portrayed by Gyllennhall, as he transforms into that character, “Roaming around on Sunday/Poking among the roots and rocks.” The rawness of Gyllenhaal’s voice rings true, and he is physically riveting, bringing to mind the bizarre animations in video games. Not an inappropriate comparison, that. After all, Seurat’s edgy work, dismissed for its pointillist style, was also outré in its day. In fact, Gyllenhaal’s hands appear to have lived holding onto that pointillist’s brush. With them he pokes gracefully, disseminates light, embraces balance, and tells us this enchanting story as it was written by James Lapine. In the second act, George appears again as Seurat’s grandson, creating works he calls “Chromolumes,” a display of “light,” “color,” “harmony,” “balance,” “tension,” and music, much the way that his grandfather had envisioned his own artistic process nearly a century earlier. And Ashford, Seurat’s model and muse, becomes the grandmother of young George, embracing her memories of the man who painted her as Dot. There is an essential nostalgia to the production that is belied by the

Joan of Arc: Into The Fire. uniqueness of its style. There is no other musical like it. It stands on the shoulders of all great musicals, as it extols masterpiece, in and of itself. Like George’s Chromolumes, Sondheim’s songs speak about “order, design, opposition, tone, symmetry . . . ” And that is where we enter, watching a blank canvas come to life with endless possibilities. There is genuine daring to Sarna Lapine’s directorial concept, which underplays the romanticism of the musical composition. More prominent here is the ensemble of actors - Brooks Ashmanskas, Phillip Boykin, and Penny Fuller, among them, who emerge “In the middle of the summer/On an island in the river on a Sunday.” It is all simply divine! The Price Having found The Price to be an oddly quotidian play, given that Arthur Miller wrote it, it is an unexpected pleasure to see this revival by The Roundabout Theatre at the American Airlines Theatre on Broadway. Under Terry Kinney’s insightful direction, this revival is, most importantly, comic, which is a damn good thing when you’re sitting in an attic filled with memories of the 1929 stock market crash. Here we meet the two surviving brothers, Victor, an understated Mark Ruffalo, his wife, an optimistic, albeit disappointed Jessica Hecht, and his brother Walter, Tony Shalhoub. While

Independent/Joan Marcus

outgoing and generous, Shalhoub’s Walter spares no one from his personal sense of justice. But the surprise appearance, amidst this spectacular casting, is an octegarian antique dealer, played by Danny DeVito. His Solomon seeks justice only for himself. While the arguments are obvious, including the fight over the family money, the absence of parental love and the loss of self that insufferable families demand, the issues drive to the heart of so much of Miller’s oeuvre. Like Death of A Salesman, the equation between success and money presides here, as does the failure, literally the crash, of the American Dream. But there is also something very simple at the heart of the dialogue between these family members about what it takes to be a man. Suddenly that question appears as the riddle that haunts many of Miller’s iconic characters, from John Proctor in The Crucible to Eddie and Rudolfo in A View from a Bridge, not to mention the ostensibly autobiographical play, After The Fall. Derek McLane’s contemporar y set places us in an attic surrounded by water towers that mirror our city’s innards. But the entertainment is coliseum-style, with Roman gladiators fighting for their lives. And at the end, DeVito’s laugher ricochets from the proscenium stage like an apparition of some ridiculous destiny.

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April 5, 2017

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IN THE NEWS

Independent Dining Springs Tavern Opens Green Almond Smoothie Ingredients 1/2 cup baby spinach 1 1/2 cup almond milk 1/2 apple 1/2 banana 1 tbsp almond butter 1 tbsp chia seeds 1 tbsp chopped ginger 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar ice Blend all ingredients together on high.

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Wing Wednesday’s $9.99 All you can Eat $12.99

Wings All Day • Large Selection of Sauces & Rubs

Thursday-Date Night Free Glass of Wine, Beer

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Saturday Spe Happy cHiaol ur 4-7p

Burger Sunday $6.00 All Day

Cliff’s Elbow Too!

1085 Franklinville Road, Laurel

298-3262

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Dan and Charlene DeSmet have opened the doors at the new Springs Tavern in the location that was formerly Wolfie’s Tavern on Fort Pond Blvd. The Springs Tavern boasts a historic location that has served the local community as a tavern, restaurant, bar, live music venue, and gathering spot for over 80 years. The new tavern aims to provide a comfortable, clean, tavern environment with good food, live entertainment, and a full schedule of sports viewing. The menu at Springs Tavern features American pub-style fare executed by Chef Michael Ruggiero at an affordable price point in a warm and family friendly environment. They are currently serving dinner Thursday through Sunday from 4 to 10 PM. The bar is open daily from 11 AM to closing. J.M.


IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

REAL ESTATE

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Food & Beverage

Compiled By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Submit your specials! Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend.com. The 1770 House The 1770 House Restaurant & Inn, the premier year-round destination for authentic Hamptons fine dining and luxury accommodations, hosts Easter Sunday dinner on April 16 from 4:30 PM with holiday specials joining the spring a la carte menu by Chef Michael Rozzi. Traditional Easter supper specials will be applewood smoked heritage ham with snap pea, Thumbelina carrot and pee wee potato ragu, cider sauce and apple conserve; dry-rubbed rack of natural lamb with herbs and drippings, roasted asparagus, farro with spring onion and pistachio; and slow-cooked Oregon beef prime rib with young spinach and green garlic, handmade cavatelli, and cheese. Selections from the seasonal fine dining and downstairs Tavern a la carte menus will also be available. At the core of Rozzi menus is local bounty with New American cuisine that changes with the season. Among spring appetizers ($16 $24) are Rozzi’s signature and spicy Montauk fluke tartare; sweet pea soup with hot smoked shrimp; roasted mushrooms over homemade brioche toast; and salads of shaved Brussels sprouts and apple with maple-cumin dressing, and, beets and tatsoi with miso vinaigrette. Spring entrées ($33 - $42) may include roasted codfish with truffle sauce; roasted Scottish salmon accompanied by house-made seafood sausage; milk-fed veal loin with rosemary and Madeira; and Berkshire pork fillet with a red-walnut pesto. In the casual downstairs Tavern of the 18th century colonial home, diners may savor The 1770 House signature burger and meatloaf plus Chef Rozzi’s new Tavern favorites – Korean BBQ Berkshire Ribs, lamb and chick pea curry, and chicken parmigiana-style ($22 - $25). On the dessert menu ($10 - $12)

E

are Rozzi’s newest creations -- dark chocolate ganache cake with milk chocolate espresso mousse, crème anglaise and Swiss chocolate gelato, and, pistachio pots de crème with blood orange marmalade and rosemary biscotti; plus The 1770 House signature dishes -- warm date cake with toffee sauce; caramel swirl gelato, and ricotta cheesecake with hazelnut crust, blueberry compote and Bourbon caramel; and a selection of artisanal gelato and sorbet. Rozzi’s cheese menu selections ($9 each) are currently from the UK and Ireland. A goat’s milk cheddar is by Mary Quicke of Devon with cow’s milk cheeses Caerphilly from Wales, Ogleshield from Somerset -- made with rich and raw Jersey milk -- and Cashel Blue from County Tipperary in Ireland. All cheeses are served with local apple compote, East End honey, and housemade crostini. Wine selections from The 1770 House 200-bottle Wine Spectator awarded list are available by the glass, half-bottle, full-bottle, and magnum with friendly guidance from Wine Director Michael Cohen. Trump Travel Ban Dinner Executive Chef Jason Weiner of Almond in Bridgehampton and Channing Daughters Winery have announced they will host a wine dinner, complete with fivecourses of dishes from countries on Trump’s travel ban. Each dish will be paired with a pink wine from Channing Daughters Winery. Cost for the evening is $85, plus tax and gratuity and $80 for members of Slow Food East End and Channing Daughters Winery Club. The dinner will be held on Wednesday, April 19, beginning at 7 PM. For reservations call 631-537-5665.

ONGOING SPECIALS Harbor Grill Harbor Grill in Springs hosts a two-for-one taco dinner night every Tuesday from 5 PM to close. Guests may choose from four different taco

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dinners while sipping $4 coronas, $10 margaritas, and $12 spicy margaritas and mango-ritas. Service Station Service Station in East Hampton offers Happy Hour from 4 to 7 PM every day. Happy Hour includes $5 pizza, $5 cocktails, $5 wine, and $5 beer. For more info visit www. servicestationrestaurant.com. Prime Time Prime Time at The Palm in East Hampton takes place Sunday through Friday from 5 to 7 PM with half off “Prime Bites” at the Palm Bar. Southampton Publick House Southampton Publick House presents Monday Night Madness specials. Enjoy $5 pints, $7 burger platters, and $6 wings from 5 to 10 PM. Tuesday is two-for-one entrees with two dinner entrees for the price of one. Wednesday is Ladies Night with draft and drink specials in the taproom starting at 10 PM. Thursday is Open Mic Night showcasing East End musicians hosted by David Kirshy starting at 8 PM, along with an 8 PM Happy Hour. In the dining room Thursday offers a three-course prime rib dinner. Friday is all night Happy Hour from 4 PM on with DJ Dory starting at 10 PM. Saturday night is DJ JetSet starting at 10 PM. Saturday and Sunday brunch takes place from 11 AM to 3 PM for $18 per person.

April 5, 2017

29

Monday to Friday is happy hour from 4 to 7 PM with beer, wine, and drink specials. For further information visit www.publick.com or call 631283-2800. Indian Wells Tavern Indian Wells Tavern in Amagansett offers half-price bottles of wine every Thursday and Sunday night. On Thursdays diners may enjoy half-price bottles of wine alongside their prime rib promotion which includes a soup or salad to start, followed by prime rib served with baked potato and vegetables for $29. On Sunday, diners may enjoy half-price bottles of wine alongside a la carte Chef Specials that will change weekly. Sen Happy Hour Sen in Sag Harbor presents Happy Hour Monday through Thursday from 5:30 to 7 PM. Enjoy $8 cocktails and $6 red and white wine. Phil’s Waterfront Phil’s Waterfront Bar and Grill in Aquebogue presents Happy Hour Monday through Friday from 4 to 7 PM. They also feature live entertainment on Saturdays. Call for details. Almond Specials Almond Restaurant in Bridgehampton presents daily specials. Meatless Mondays will continue offering a three course meatless menu for $35

Continued on Page 30.

Japanese RestauRant and sushi BaR

Fine Dining Specializing in Japanese Cuisine & Sushi Offering Lunch & Dinner Menus and Exotic Cocktails We also have a Tatami Room

ASTPORT LIQUORS Monday 9-6, Tuesday-Thursday Friday• &•Closed Saturday 9-9, 12-6 Open 12pm 6pm onSunday Monday OpenSunday Sunday 12pm-9-8, - 6pm Monday 12-7pm

Tastings Every Sat. 3-7 pm

Senior Discount Tuesday

All Cards AllMajor Major Credit Credit Cards & DebitAccepted Cards Accepted

Gift Wrapping LOTTO IN STORE

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1.00 Off 10.00 Purchase $

Not to be combined with other offers.

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15 Eastport Manor Road • Eastport • 325-1388 • Open 9 am (In the Eastport Shopping Center, next to King Kullen)

Open 7 Days for Lunch & Dinner

631-267-7600 40 Montauk Highway Amagansett, NY


30

April 5, 2017

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Food & Beverage CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29.

all night. Tuesdays are steak frites night with a featured steak frites for $19.95. Thursday nights enjoy ½ dozen Montauk pearl oysters or ½ dozen shrimp cocktail for $10 at the bar or at tables. On Sundays grab a burger and a beer at the bar for $15. A $29 three-course prix fixe will be offered from 5:30 to 7 PM every night. For reservations contact Almond at 631-537-5665. Monday Night Paint The Salty Canvas presents Monday Night Paint Parties at Townline BBQ in Sagaponack happening from 6:30 to 8:30 PM. Cost for the evening is $45 and includes one complimentary Happy Hour drink. To participate guests must register at www.saltycanvashamptons. com within 24 hours of the event. Living Room c/o The Maidstone in East Hampton offers a prix fixe that includes three courses for just $35 at the cozy Living Room restaurant, Sunday through Thursday, from 5:30 to 7 PM. Happy Hour is Sunday to Thursday from 4 to 6 PM. Enjoy drinks and appetizers at 50 percent off.

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Free Soup Days Tuesday and Thursday are “Free Soup Days” at Clamman on North Sea Road in Southampton from 11 AM to 3 PM, with the purchase of a sandwich or entree. For more info call 631-283-6669. Nick & Toni’s Nick & Toni’s in East Hampton has introduced its own variation of “Nonna’s Sunday Sauce.” Ever y Sunday, diners may enjoy slow-cooked “Sunday sauce,” served over pasta. Cost for the dish is $20 per person. Spaghetti squash will be available as a gluten-free substitution for pasta. N i c k & To n i ’s o f f e r s t h e i r famous woodburning oven pizzas. The pizzas are available Sunday through Thursday all night. The Choice prix fixe menu is available Sunday through Friday (restaurant is closed Tuesdays) beginning at 6 PM. The restaurant also hosts happy hour every Monday through Friday from 5:30 to 6:30 PM and Sundays from 2:30 through 6:30 PM. During Happy Hour a sommelier selected glass of wine will be offered for $8, select cocktails are half price including the Meyer Lemon Cosmo, Seasonal ‘Rita, and the Spanish G&T, and a rotating bottled brew is available for $6. A select bar menu of small plates are available including meatball sliders for $6, pizza margherita for $10, formaggi plate for $10, and seasonal bruschetta for $5. Call Nick & Toni’s at 631-324-3550. Buckley’s Inn Between Happy Hour weekdays at Buckley’s Inn Between in Hampton Bays runs from 4 to 7 PM. On Thursdays, it’s Buckley’s famous wing night with $15 all you can eat wings and all you can drink Miller Lite from 10 PM to 1 AM and music by DJ Pauly.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Wine Series The Westhampton Free Library will present a four-part wine tasting series with Eileen Duffy, the author of Behind the Bottle: The Rise of Wine on Long Island on Thursdays, through April 20, at 6 PM at Westhampton Beach VFW Post 5350, 101 Old Riverhead Road. The series will feature white, red, rose, and sparkling wine tastings and appetizers, as well as a free voucher for a free tasting at the North Fork Winery. The cost is $15 per class. Payment is due at time of registration. To register, visit www. westhamptonlibrary.net or call 631288-3335. Lieb Cellars On Saturday there will be live music featuring The Second Hands from 3 to 6 PM. www.liebcellars.com. Raphael Chris Hurley and Friends perform from 1 to 4 PM on Saturday. On Sunday, same time, it’s Marty Attridge. www. raphaelwine.com. Clovis Point Vineyard and Winery Clovis Point Vineyard and Winery

Prime Meats • Groceries Produce • Take-Out Fried Chicken • BBQ Ribs Sandwiches • Salads Party Platters and 6ft. Heroes Beer, Ice, Soda

Open 7 Days a Week

IN THE NEWS

presents Handful of Chords on Saturday from 1:30 to 5:30 PM. Sunday sees Joe Scollo from the band Full House from 1:30 to 5:30 PM. www.clovispointwines.com. Shinn Estate Vineyard Shinn Estate Vineyards hosts self– guided vineyard walks on Friday. Reservations are required. On Saturday and Sunday at 1:30 PM join Barbara Shinn for a Vineyard Walk. At 2:30 PM on Saturday and Sunday, there’s a winery and barrel cellar tour. www.shinnestatevineyard.com. Castello di Borghese Vineyard There will be a winemaker’s walk, vineyard tour, and wine tastings every Saturday at 1 PM. $20 entrance fee. Call to reserve your spot or sign up online. www. castellodiborghese.com. Baiting Hollow Farm Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard presents Ricky Roche from 2 to 6 PM on Saturday. The vineyard will also host Acoustic Soul from 2 to 6 PM on Sunday. www. baitinghollowfarmvineyard.com.

Food Course The Amagansett Food Institutes hosts the Food Handler’s Certificate Course on Wednesday, April 12, at South Fork Kitchens located on the Southampton Campus of Stony Brook University from 5 PM to 7 PM. A test will be given at the end of the day and the results and certificates will be mailed out shorty after the course date. Admission is $155 for AFI members and their employees, and $175 for non-members. On the day of the course you should bring a check or cash for the instructor, valid photo ID, and pen and paper for notes. To hold your spot send a $20 deposit to AFI at PO Box 2611 Amagansett, NY 11937.

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Find Somewhere to Eat in one of The Independent’s Dining Columns! . . .or on our website

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